Can someone tell me what is so different about Anakin's write up except the addition of Ahsoka Tano? I mean something that isn't a minor detail that can be retconed by wiping away Jedi Trial or killing Ahsoka in episode whatever? Not being as astute on canon as so many of you I'm not sure how the databank change made such a big deal. Referencing Cato Neimoidia seemed like a nod saying that not all EU is out the window. Am I off here?

Can someone tell me what is so different about Anakin's write up except the addition of Ahsoka Tano? I mean something that isn't a minor detail that can be retconed by wiping away Jedi Trial or killing Ahsoka in episode whatever? Not being as astute on canon as so many of you I'm not sure how the databank change made such a big deal. Referencing Cato Neimoidia seemed like a nod saying that not all EU is out the window. Am I off here?

"Impressed by Anakin's skill with the Force, the Jedi Council quickly conferred upon him the status of General and Jedi Knight at the war's outset."

5/6 of the way through the war is hardly the outset.

Jedimarine said:

It doesn't bode well in a discussion about reto-activily altering a fictional universe when we want to reto-actively alter reality.

After almost 24 hours of this going through my head, I think I'm actually going to have to say "no" to the idea of getting Star Wars authors like Dan and Abel drunk. I'm pretty sure alcohol was involved in the conceptions of Waru and Zonama Sekot

Randy Stradley is right: we're all too negative. Star Wars has swallowed far larger continuity gutbombs, and many of them have proved beneficial in the long run. If the Expanded Universe remains intact after the Prequel Trilogy, it'll survive an animated TV show.

Weirdly enough, the best components Star Wars are the additions everyone resisted most violently. I admit, the very idea of Legacy made me sick to my stomach with fear, but now I'm a subscriber. If nothing else, the Clone Wars series will revive popular interest in Star Wars -- it might even popularize the Expanded Universe!

On the flip side, the worst components of Star Wars are the additions everyone anticipated most eagerly. We fanboys are poor prognosticators.

Star Wars has swallowed far larger continuity gutbombs, and many of them have proved beneficial in the long run. If the Expanded Universe remains intact after the Prequel Trilogy, it'll survive an animated TV show.

The movies are all of six hours of content; the TV show only needs to go 16 episodes to match that, meaning that even one full season of the show* will have more screentime--and thus introduce more content for the books to hew to--than the prequels combined.

I think that what has everybody concerned is not only this specific gutbomb (if accurate), but that there are likely to be more if they're ignoring even the broad strokes of prior Clone Wars tales, much less details. (Which is completely understandable, just not what I want to see. )

*Using the American standard of 22-26 here, not the British standard of 6.

Ewok movies made me sell all my Kenner toys.
That was only my first Rouge77 period.
Happened again when DE came out.
I was like 'wtk happened to my Marvel universe?'
Cue the second 'disenfranchised' period.
Then it was peace for a while... Until someone in a restaurant came up with the Vong.

I don't think "people hate the Vong", as a general rule. Sure, some people dislike them - some people dislike the NJO - but I suspect that the group who think the concept was inherrently weak, or that it was never well-executed in individual novels, is smaller than the NJO-hating group itself.

Does anyone hate Nom Anor? Nen Yim? Kunra?

Shedao Shai? Tsvong Lah? Nas Choka?

Harrar? Elan? Deign Lian?

Vua Rapuung? Riina? Mezhan Kwaad?

EDIT: I guess the point is that there's a difference between "I don't like the sound of this", "I don't like how it's panned out", and "everyone hates the whole idea".

The movies are all of six hours of content; the TV show only needs to go 16 episodes to match that, meaning that even one full season of the show* will have more screentime--and thus introduce more content for the books to hew to--than the prequels combined.

It's not really a fair comparison. The Clone Wars TV show will cover at most a year of time, in-universe. They're going to spend all of it fighting a war that's already bookended by 2 movies. It's not the same as the 13 year period of space the prequels covered, and it doesn't have huge new revelations about the Jedi, the Republic, the Clone Wars, and major characters like the prequels did.

Heck, in the time between Episodes I and II came out, we had Jedi with multiple wives and red & yellow lightsabers fighting alongside a standing Republic military.

I believe that the Clone Wars will be the best era of the entire Star Wars Universe. Expanded Universe or not. It already has coverage in two movies, a micro-cartoon series, alot of comic books, novels, junior adult novels, video games, topps cards, toys and short stories. Thas just the first phase of things.

The second phase of this is just going to be gargantum. You have for starters a movie, the 22 Episodes at 22 minutes each for the first season. Just that alone, and you have almost the same amount of movie time for the prequels. Then you have all those books, comci books, a video game, toys, topps trading cards, and even role playing stuff. You also hav coverage in the official main star wars site, plus they got stuff on Disney Weekend on the month of June. Now what era has ever had that kind of coverage? Or will have it? For now, none, just the clone wars.

And if this movie and first season is very succesful......You can bet that more books, comic books, and video games will come out. Adding even more